| Literature DB >> 3621031 |
Abstract
The intracellular water content of astrocytes in primary cultures shows a biphasic swelling pattern on exposure to various increased external K+ concentrations over the range of 1.5-100 mM. The two phases (physiological, 1.5-12 mM K+; pathological, 25-100 mM K+) are based on two different mechanisms. Both can be blocked by low Cl- solutions and involve intensive net uptake of K+. However, the physiological phase consists of the activation of a KCl + NaCl carrier, while the Na+ in turn is pumped out by Na+-K+ ATPase, with a resultant net accumulation of KCl. At pathological K+ concentrations the KCl + NaCl carrier is less active because the Na+ driving force, its energy source, is reduced (owing to depolarization by K+). However, the Donnan equilibrium across the cell membrane is heavily disturbed, which leads to passive KCl accumulation. The results suggest that volume changes in cultured glial cells during exposure to high K+ should be taken into consideration since they disguise K+ accumulation when only ion activity is measured.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3621031 DOI: 10.1139/y87-166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Physiol Pharmacol ISSN: 0008-4212 Impact factor: 2.273